Beatmania: The Sound of Tokyo was a rhythm video game developed and distributed by Konami and was sold in combination with the special Beatmania Controller that had especial keys to play the game and was one of the last games of the Beatmania series
The city has announced plans to destroy the concert hall! You are Takt, a young conductor attempting to recruit the best musicians around so that they can put on a concert to save the performance hall. In order to accomplish this, Takt must travel around the city making people happy with his music and recruiting them for his orchestra. Once he has his ensemble together, it's time for the big show: a musical extravaganza at the symphony hall. Perform perfectly and you will save the hall and keep music alive for generations to come. If you fail, the hall will be closed down. The game features 11 levels, including the epic performance at the symphony hall. Touch-sensitive controls allow you to feel the music. The soundtrack features Brahms, Strauss, Mozart, Tchaikovsky, Schubert, Beethoven, and many other classical artists.
"Space Channel 5 Special Edition" actually contains two games. The first is "Space Channel 5", and the second is "Space Channel 5 Part 2". This is the first NA release of the latter game.
Make your own hit without any musical training in a matter of minutes! Eight real world clubs and locations are waiting for you: each with a different and current music style for your creativity to explore. With help given to you along the way by DJ Carl Cox, you can be sure that the crowd in your Clubworld will be jumpin'!
This is the first of track packs for Rock Band, released for the platforms that do not support downloadable content. The original game is not required to play and Volume 1 includes twenty master recordings of songs.
Magix Music Maker is a commercial digital music editor, which was designed by the company Magix for the consumer sector. In its present form, its program attributes originate from Magix's professional digital audio workstation, Samplitude. The first version of Music Maker was published in 1994. With more than a million copies sold, Music Maker has become one of Europe's most successful music editing programs.[3] Magix Music Maker is user friendly and someone without experience in music production is able to make songs in various genres.
A CD version for PlayStation 2 was released in 2003,[4] followed by a Deluxe Edition on DVD in 2005.[5] In 2013, Music Maker Jam was released for download in the Windows 8 store.[6] A version for Android followed later that year.[7]
SingStar Singalong with Disney is a karaoke game featuring the most famous hits from Disney movies, from Tarzan to Sleeping Beauty without forgetting Aladdin or Peter Pan.
The game gives points which are distributed by the purity of singing, as in how well does one manage to stay on tune. It doesn't matter if you change octaves in the middle of the song or what words are you singing in (it doesn't have a word recognition), so your singing is rated by how well you manage to hit the correct note at the correct time
SingStar is a karaoke game which exclusively features songs by the Swedish rock band Kent. There are no changes to the gameplay formula: player(s) sing into a microphone and the game gives points based on the performance. The only basis of assessment is if the correct note is hit with the correct timeing; the sung words or octave does not play into the result.
The Singstar concept has met great success in Scandinavia, but earlier releases had only English songs. Consumers wanted to sing songs they knew, in their own language, and Singstar svenska hits was born. The game follows the same layout as previous games in the series, but with new artists.
SingStar: Svenska Hits Schlager is a karaoke game featuring 30 songs by Swedish artists. There are no changes to the gameplay formula: player(s) sing into a microphone and the game gives points based on the performance. The only basis of assessment is if the correct note is hit with the correct timing; the sung words or octave does not play into the result.
Pump It Up: Exceed is a dancing game similar to the games in the Dance Dance Revolution series. The Pump It Up dance mat is different from the norm as the arrows are set on diagonals and includes a button in the middle which allows for more complexity in the dance moves that are required to be performed in the game.
The general gameplay has the player watching a music video as symbols scroll by. The player must match the symbols on the screen with the symbols on the Pump It Up dance pad with their feet. Hitting the arrows in sync with the music will keep the players life bar up and give the player a good rating, while doing the opposite will drain the life bar and give bad ratings. If the life bar drains all the way, the game ends.
The game has several mode to choose from:
Arcade Mode has the player trying to achieve an “A” or an “S” rating on three consecutive songs. Doing that allows the player to play an extra song. Successfully completing songs in the Arcade mode opens them for play in Home Mode.
Home
Jack of All Trade's FUNKMASTER FLEX DIGITAL HITZ FACTORY for the PS2 provides players with everything they need to make and mix their own sounds like pros. HITZ FACTORY includes over 16,000 instrument sounds and different musical styles for players to mix and match into their own songs. Players can select from among different styles like hip hop, pop, trance, garage indy, and metal, then add, mix, and modify clips from the thousands available to create their own unique songs. HITZ FACTORY also supports USB microphones, so players can even record their own music or vocals to include. Vocals will be analyzed and a new musical riff will be created based off of player's pitch and range. Players can then hear what they just sang as if it was played on a guitar, the drums, or other instruments. HITZ FACTORY also lets players create music videos to go with the music by blending several of the more than 500 clips available into their own video. Up to four different clips can be layered together then mixed with different ef
SingStar: Hits 2 is a karaoke game exclusively released in France. The features songs are almost exclusively from French artists. There are no changes to the gameplay formula: player(s) sing into a microphone and the game gives points based on the performance. The only basis of assessment is if the correct note is hit with the correct timeing; the sung words or octave does not play into the result. The game allows access to the SingStore, an online shop for downloading additional songs.
SingStar: Hits is the French release of SingStar Vol.2 and is containing 27 French songs for 3 in English. The tracklist is a mix between classic songs and new hits.
It's a karaoke game, giving points which are distributed by the purity of singing, as in how well does one manage to stay on tune. It doesn't matter if you change octaves in the middle of the song or what words are you singing in (it doesn't have a word recognition), so your singing is rated by how well you manage to hit the correct note at the correct time. There's a new mode called Harmony Duet, in which two players sing different lines of the same song, at the same time.
The Singstar concept has met great success in Scandinavia, but earlier releases had only English songs. Consumers wanted to sing songs they knew, in their own language, and Singstar svenska hits was born. The game follows the same layout as previous games in the series, but with new artists.
Grab the mics and prepare to impress the judges with the complete X Factor experience! Begin your journey to stardom by competing in the famous X-Cruciating Auditions, Boot Camp X-Treme and finally fulfilling your dreams by performing in the X-Ceptional Live Shows... Will you be the winner!?
Based on DJMax Portable 2 but mixing elements from all the games, DJMax Fever features a brand new mix of music tracks, a re-balanced difficulty curve, new visual elements and more! The title packs in more than 100 songs for you to tap through, as well as a Freestyle Mode, Extreme challenges, five difficulty levels, Network Battle Mode and a collection gallery to house the music videos, soundtracks, and images you unlock.
The Idolmaster: Shiny Festa is a series of three Japanese rhythm video games. The games are part of The Idolmaster series of games, and were originally released as Honey Sound, Funky Note, and Groovy Tune. They were the first games in the series to be localized into English.
The gameplay in Shiny Festa eschews the simulation format of previous Idolmaster games, and instead features a rhythmic gameplay in which the player times the presses of buttons to the rhythm of the songs and a predetermined pattern displayed on the screen.